‘I’m deadly serious’: why filmmaker Michael Moore
is confident of a Democratic midterm win
The Academy-award winner has been emailing a ‘daily
dose of truth’ to mobilize supporters of the party to vote in November
Edward
Helmore
Sun 23 Oct
2022 03.00 EDT
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/oct/23/michael-moore-democratic-party-win-midterm-interview
For the
past month, Academy Award-winning documentary maker Michael Moore has been
emailing out a daily missive “Mike’s Midterm Tsunami of Truth” on why he
believes Democrats will win big in America’s midterm elections next month.
Moore calls
it “a brief honest daily dose of the truth – and the real optimism these truths
offer us”. It also – at this moment in time – flies in the face of most
political punditry, which sees a Republican win on the cards.
Making
predictions is a risky undertaking in any election cycle, but especially in
this round with Democrats banking they can hitch Republican candidates to an
unpopular supreme court decision to overturn federal guarantees of a woman’s
right to abortion. Republicans, meanwhile, are laser-focused on high inflation
rates, economic troubles and fears over crime rates.
But
political forecasting has become Moore’s business since he correctly called
that Donald Trump would win the national elections in 2016 against common
judgment of the media and pollsters businesses.
The thrust
of his reasoning that this will be “Roe-vember” is amplified daily in the emails.
In missive #21 (Don’t Believe It) on Tuesday, he addressed the issue of
political fatalism, specifically the media narrative that the party in power
necessarily does poorly in midterm elections.
“The effect
of this kind of reporting can be jarring – it can get inside the average
American’s head and scramble it,” Moore wrote. “You can start to feel deflated.
You want to quit. You start believing that we liberals are a bunch of losers.
And by thinking of ourselves this way, if you’re not careful, you begin to
manifest the old narrative into existence.”
Reached by
telephone last week, Moore, 68, told the Guardian that his purpose, in effect,
is to puncture herd-thinking. He points to three recent examples where
political norms were wrongly interpreted.
“If I said
to you six months ago, ‘you know Kansas, right? It’s a huge pro-abortion state
and this summer by a margin of 60% they’re going to keep abortion legal’ you’d
think I had made a crazy statement,” he says.
“If I’d
told you at the same time that in the congressional election in Alaska, a hard
red state, that it’s not only not going to be won by a Democrat but a Native
Alaskan Democrat, again you’d have to question if I was out of my mind.”
Finally, he
draws attention to Boise, Idaho, where an incumbent Republican candidate for
the board of education was endorsed by a far-right group, the Idaho Liberty
Dogs, and lost to an 18-year-old high school senior and progressive activist,
Shiva Rajbhandari, who was also co-founder of the Boise chapter of climate
group Extinction Rebellion.
In each
case, Moore says, conventional thinking was challenged.
“I have a
high-school education so probably, maybe, you shouldn’t be getting your news from
me, if you’d just been paying attention in the last six months to Kansas, Idaho
and Alaska you’d have seen the red flags going up,” he says.
Moore likes
to go off in a different direction. He comes from Michigan with its strong
connections to anti-government movements – Moore went to the same high-school
as Oklahoma bombing co-conspirator Terry Nichols.
His read is
not metropolitan-orientated. Last year he wrote Democrats have “insurrectionist
envy” of the January 6 Capitol riot. “Deep down in your soul, as you watched
what your eyes could not believe was happening, admit to me that in that
appalling moment on January 6, 2021, you were – how do I say it – jealous that
it was the fascists who had risen up, and not us long before now,” he wrote.
Moore insists
he’s not simply being provocative in predicting a Democrat landslide. “I’m
sixty-eight and I don’t have time to mess around. I’m deadly serious.”
Moore
predicts the election will see a record turnout of younger voters whose views
pundits and commentators often miss. “If you spend any time with women, the
Dobbs decision struck them personally and deeply. This was a religious edict
based on conservative Catholic principles.”
Moore’s
political musings are not limited to critical observations of the right.
Missteps by Democrats are also apparent. “The biggest hurdle to what I’m doing
with the series is the Democratic party,” he says. He’s been watching Democrat
governor and state election debates on the US public broadcaster C-Span.
“It’s very
disheartening and it would make even me question how we’re going to pull this
off. The Democratic party consultants are feeding lines that are so lame and
weak. They don’t go for the jugular like a Republican would. It doesn’t inspire
people at home.”
“We stand
here on the precipice of a very important election and our greatest enemy could
be the Democratic party itself,” he adds.
But Moore
has a further point, often made but not always heeded, that biggest political
grouping in the US is not Republican or Democrat, but non-voters. This
non-voter party, which is perhaps the most potentially powerful but also the
most inaccessible, is whom Moore wants to reach.
“The
non-voter party don’t see how politics benefits them, they’re disgusted with
the hypocrisy, a lot are disgusted with the crazy fighting that goes on, and
the craziness that Trump amped up,” Moore says, adding that when he turns on
the TV in the evening he doesn’t necessarily go to a news channel but looks for
a comedy.
Moore’s
call-to-arms then is to reach the non-believers. “Everyone of who does care,
and feels like our democracy could be hanging on by a thread” now “has to do
something in these last three weeks”.
In his
case, he says, it could be as simple as calling a cousin who doesn’t vote to
give them reasons why, this time, it’s important and that “she can go back to
non-voting after this.”
But what
would he say to them?
“Aren’t you
tired of nothing getting done? All this deadlock bullshit. One way to undo this
logjam is to give Democrats a chance to pass legislation and let’s see how it
works out. Maybe it won’t work. Maybe they’ve got bad ideas. But no idea and no
decision is paralyzing and hurts the country. If we talk like that, talk
normal, that could be a huge help.”

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